Moses said she was planning it last week when she stumbled upon a 2013 report by the Public Religion Research Institute in her emails. The study found 75% of white Americans don’t have friends who aren’t white. It also revealed 91% of white people’s friends are white. And 65% of black people do not have friends who are white, the report noted.

“My first thought was a bit of shock,” she told The News. “But as a black person we know that anyway: Most white people don’t have black friends.”

Though the concept sounds like a “Saturday Night Live” skit waiting to happen, most of the participants were open-minded, even D.J. Brown, 26, who despite being a product of mixed-race parents, came in with his doubts.

“I was definitely skeptical,” Brown said. “Who knows how this could have turned out.”

Mark Anthony (l.) and Cheryle Moses (r.) chat at the event.

“A lot of times it is not prejudice,” Anthony said. “It is the circles I run in that I don’t have the opportunities to meet white people.”

Niall Mathieson, a white man from England, said his church tipped him to the $15 event.

“I am already passionate about integration,” he said. “It was a no brainer to be here ... it’s a fantastic concept, I’m thinking on where it can go from here.”

With racial tensions and divisiveness so high in the U.S., Moses believes personal conversations could pave the way to a little more understanding. “It’s cool to march and protest if that’s your thing,” she said. “But I need to get you one-on-one.”

The attention around Come Meet a Black Person has helped get more recognition of her organization than ever before.

“I could not have orchestrated this if I wanted to,” she told The News. “I’ve been sending out press releases for 17 years.”